With about half a million Sandhill Cranes at their great migration staging area in central North America

Where it is possible to watch thousands of cranes on their noisy way to and from their traditional roosting sites – one of
the greatest wildlife spectacles in North America

Also present in the nearby Rainwater Basin there may be numerous waterbirds, including Snow and Ross’s Geese

And there is are Greater Prairie Chicken and Sharp-tailed Grouse leks nearby

Every spring 400,000-600,000 Sandhill Cranes squeeze into the narrow 80-mile-long corridor of the Platte River near Grand
Island, Nebraska, with numbers usually reaching a peak during late March. Helped by farmers who leave corn for them in huge fields, the cranes
usually spend about a month fattening up for the final flight north to Canada, Alaska and Siberia which usually begins in early April following
some strong south winds. They are easy to see of course but best seen flying to the traditional roosting sites and flying out from these to feed
in the fields, from blinds (hides).

This part of Nebraska is near Lake Manawa near Omaha in Iowa, a good site for American Woodcock (displaying
in March) and possibly Barred Owl and Eastern Screech-Owl. Also near here is Fontenelle Forest where Pileated and Red-headed
Woodpeckers occur. The Harlan County Reservoir on the Kansas border is a good place for American White Pelicans in March.

Best Sites for Birds and other wildlife in the Platte River area, Nebraska

Lillian Annette Rowe Sanctuary During March and early April the National Audubon Society manages viewing blinds (hides)
to watch the dawn ‘flyout’ of cranes from along a stretch of the river at the Lillian Annette Rowe Sanctuary. These are accessible by reservation
only and best booked well in advance here. The blinds offer excellent
panoramic views of large flocks of cranes, but may not provide good opportunities for close-up photographs, in which case photographers may wish to
book the Rowe Sanctuary’s ‘photo blinds’.

Gibbon Bridge One of the best places to watch the evening flight of cranes (a quarter of a million in 2012!). Here they
fly overhead, calling loudly, to land in the shallows of the river where they roost.

Best Times for Birds and other wildlife in the Platte River area, Nebraska

Crane numbers usually peak in late March which is also the beginning of the lekking season for prairie grouse. During this time it may be sunny or
cold and windy with rain and even snow, and especially chilly first thing in the morning in the crane and grouse blinds (hides).

Recommended Bird Books etc. for the Platte River area, Nebraska

Field Guide to the Birds of North America edited by J Dunn and J Alderfer. NGS, 2011 (Sixth Edition).

Kaufman Field Guide to Birds of North America by K Kaufman. Houghton Mifflin, 2005.

The North American Bird Guide by D Sibley. Helm, 2014 (Second Edition).

Mammals of North America by F A Reid. Peterson North American Field Guides, 2006 (Fourth Edition).

Peterson Field Guide to Finding Mammals in North America by V Dinets. Houghton Mifflin, 2015.

Kaufman Field Guide to Butterflies of North America by J Brock and K Kaufman. Houghton Mifflin, 2003.

Apps etc.

National Geographic Birds: Field Guide to North America.

The Sibley eGuide to the Birds of North America.

Peterson Birds of North America.

Audubon Birds - A Field Guide to North American Birds.

iBird Ultimate Guide to Birds.

Birding and Wildlife Trip Reports for the Platte River area, Nebraska

Many trip reports, some for the Platte River and nearby, are posted on the websites listed here. On some of these
websites some reports are independent and some are posted by tour companies who organize tours to
the Platte River and nearby. These tour companies and others also post their own reports on their websites,
which are listed under 'Some Organized Tours to the Platte River' below.

Local bird and wildlife guides in the Platte River area, Nebraska

The costs of organized tours partly reflect the quality of the tour leaders.
Some leaders are certainly better than others and many companies claim their leaders are
the best but even the best rely at least to some extent on the exceptional
skills of the local guides they employ. If you are travelling independently,
employing such local guides will greatly increase your chances of seeing the
wildlife you wish to see.

Accommodation for birders in the Platte River area, Nebraska

Some Organized Tours for birds and other wildlife to the Platte River area, Nebraska

There are many tour companies who organize tours to see mammals, birds, other
wildlife and other natural wonders. The cost of these tours vary considerably
according to such variables as the airlines used, the number of days the tours
last, the number of sites visited, the number of people in the group (an
important consideration if you wish to see such wildlife as rainforest mammals
and birds), the number of tour leaders, the standard of accommodation and
transport, and the percentage profit the company hopes to make. Generally, where
the number of days tours last and the number of sites visited are similar, the
cheapest tours are those that use the cheapest airlines, accommodation and local
transport, that have the largest groups with the least number of leaders, and
that make the least amount of profit. The most expensive tours tend to be those
which are exceptionally long, use the most expensive accommodation (ridiculously
lavish in some cases, even for single nights) and which make the most profit.
Some tour costs partly reflect the quality of the tour leaders. Some leaders are
certainly better than others and many companies claim their leaders are
the best but even the best rely at least to some extent on the exceptional
skills of the local guides they employ.

While tour companies organize tours with set itineraries many also organize custom
tours for individuals and private groups who instead of taking a tour with a set
itinerary want to follow their own itinerary to suit their own personal tastes,
whether it be mammals, birds, other wildlife, other natural wonders or even man-made
attractions, or a mixture of them all. Many organized tours with set itineraries are
also fast-paced and target as many species as possible, whether they are mammals, birds
or other wildlife or everything, which usually leaves little time to enjoy the best
sites and individual species, but on a custom tour those taking part can specify the
pace and the sites and species they wish to concentrate on. Custom tours also suit
people who like to travel with people they already know, rather than with a group of
strangers, and people with partners with different interests. Individuals and small
groups will almost certainly have to pay more than the price of an organized tour with
a set itinerary but a large group of friends may be able to travel for less than the
price quoted for a set tour.

Tour companies who are running organized tours to the Platte River in the next couple
of years include the following. Many of these also offer custom tours.